[Index] |
Elizabeth (SYMONDS) SYMONS (1787 - ) |
Children | Self + Spouses | Parents | Grandparents | Greatgrandparents |
Margaret DOWSE (1815 - ) Isaac DOWSE (1818 - ) Elizabeth Henrietta (DOW DOUSE DOUX) DOWSE (1822 - 1910) Thomas DOWSE (1824 - 1903) |
Elizabeth (SYMONDS) SYMONS (1787 - ) + Isaac DOWSE (1781 - 1853) |
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b. abt 1787 |
+. Isaac DOWSE (1781 - 1853) |
Near Relatives of Elizabeth (SYMONDS) SYMONS (1787 - ) | ||||||
Relationship | Person | Born | Birth Place | Died | Death Place | Age |
Self | Elizabeth (SYMONDS) SYMONS | abt 1787 | ||||
Spouse/Partner | Isaac DOWSE | abt 1781 | 1853 | Campbelltown, NSW, Australia | 72 | |
Daughter | Margaret DOWSE | abt 1815 | New South Wales, Australia | |||
Son | Isaac DOWSE | abt 1818 | New South Wales, Australia | |||
Daughter | Elizabeth Henrietta (DOW DOUSE DOUX) DOWSE | abt 1822 | New South Wales, Australia | 27 Dec 1910 | 'Glendarrwill', Maude, Victoria, Australia | 88 |
Son | Thomas DOWSE | abt 1824 | New South Wales, Australia | 1903 | Bathurst, NSW, Australia | 79 |
Son in Law | George MACDONALD | 03 Jan 1824 | Campbelltown, NSW, Australia | 25 Mar 1924 | 'Glendarrwill', Maude, Victoria, Australia | 100 |
Grandson | Alexander Cameron MACDONALD | 09 Dec 1845 | Campbelltown, NSW, Australia | 08 May 1897 | Woodstock, Queensland, Australia | 51 |
Granddaughter | Mary Ann Sophia MACDONALD | 1847 | Campbelltown, NSW, Australia | 1940 | Penrith, NSW, Australia | 93 |
Granddaughter | Sarah Jane MACDONALD | 1848 | Wagga Wagga, NSW, Australia | 20 May 1899 | Lethbridge, Victoria, Australia | 51 |
Granddaughter | Elizabeth Henrietta (Berry) MACDONALD | 26 Dec 1850 | Brewarrina, NSW, Australia | 25 Jan 1944 | Minerva Creek, Springsure, Queensland, Australia | 93 |
Granddaughter | Margaret Isabella MACDONALD | 10 Dec 1851 | Wagga Wagga, NSW, Australia | 08 Nov 1944 | West Australia, Australia | 92 |
Granddaughter | Adelaide Victoria MACDONALD | 1852 | Campbelltown, NSW, Australia | 1947 | Queensland, Australia | 95 |
Granddaughter | Christine Eliza MACDONALD | 1853 | 04 Jul 1948 | Springsure, Queensland, Australia | 95 | |
Granddaughter | Ellen Augusta MACDONALD | abt 1858 | 1923 | Northcote, Victoria, Australia | 65 | |
Grandson | John George MACDONALD | 1859 | 17 Aug 1921 | 62 | ||
Grandson | Charles Hugh William MACDONALD | 19 Apr 1861 | Geelong, Victoria, Australia | 10 Jan 1946 | Glen Darriwell, Maude, Victoria, Australia | 84 |
Events in Elizabeth (SYMONDS) SYMONS (1787 - )'s life | |||||
Date | Age | Event | Place | Notes | Src |
abt 1787 | Elizabeth (SYMONDS) SYMONS was born | 1828 census - age 41 = c 1787 | 52 | ||
28 Jul 1814 | 27 | Arrived | 'Bloxbornbury, Sydney, NSW, Australia | Note 1 | |
abt 1815 | 28 | Birth of daughter Margaret DOWSE | New South Wales, Australia | 1828 census - age 13 - c 1815 | |
abt 1818 | 31 | Birth of son Isaac DOWSE | New South Wales, Australia | 1828 census - age 10 = c 1818 | |
abt 1822 | 35 | Birth of daughter Elizabeth Henrietta (DOW DOUSE DOUX) DOWSE | New South Wales, Australia | Note 2 | 52 |
abt 1824 | 37 | Birth of son Thomas DOWSE | New South Wales, Australia | Note 3 | 52 |
1828 | 41 | Census | Airds, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia | Note 4 | 81 |
1853 | 66 | Death of husband Isaac DOWSE (aged 72) | Campbelltown, NSW, Australia | Note 5 | 52 |
1903 | 116 | Death of son Thomas DOWSE (aged 79) | Bathurst, NSW, Australia | Note 6 | 52 |
27 Dec 1910 | 123 | Death of daughter Elizabeth Henrietta (DOW DOUSE DOUX) DOWSE (aged 88) | 'Glendarrwill', Maude, Victoria, Australia | Note 7 | 52 |
Elizabeth (SYMONDS) SYMONS died (no date) | Note 8 |
Personal Notes: |
from birth/death reg of daughter
Elizabeth SYMONS was tried in Northumberland 29 April 1813 - transported on the Bloxbornebury for 7 years. The Bloxbornebury embarked 120 females - left England 22 Feb 1814 and arrived 28 July 1814 - 156 days later http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/AUS-PT-JACKSON-CONVICTS/2004-09/1095105666 From: Pamela Hayes Subject: Convict Transports "B" BROXBORNEBURY Date: Tue, 14 Sep 2004 06:01:53 +1000 Ship: BROXBORNEBURY Name of my convict: Ann Lord and daughter Ruth Type: ship Class A1 C1 D2 Tonnage: 720 (1814); 751 (1840-43) Guns: 4 Dimension: 20’ draught Materials: sheathed with copper over boards Registered: London Home Port: London Master: Thos Pitcher Junior Surgeon: Colin McLachlan Where built ?: Gravesend / River Thames, 1812 Sailed: 22nd February 1814 from England Arrived: 28th July 1814 – taking 156 days What else did it carry: merchandise What did it carry on return voyage: coal Leaving on Tuesday 22nd February 1814 the Broxbornebury sailed in company with the Surrey. On board were 120 female convicts (some with children); twenty-eight free families, several well-to-do passengers and a crew of seventy.Thirty five of these female convicts had been travelling since 12th November 1812 aboard The Emu which was hijacked in the middle of the Indian Ocean. The Surrey, with 200 male convicts, marine guards and crew on board separated from the Broxbornebury early in the voyage, calling at Rio on 12 April with “gaol fever” or typhus aboard. Departing Rio on 21 April with the typhus became even more virulent It resulted in a death toll of 51 convicts, guards and crew including the Captain of the ship, the First Mate, the Second Mate, the boatswain, the ship's surgeon, six seamen and four soldiers. The Surrey was off Shoalhaven in late July when the Broxbornebury rejoined her. Without anyone to navigate the ship, the Captain Pitcher transferred a volunteer on board the fever ridden ship, to navigate it into Port Jackson. Once inside the Sydney Heads on 27 July 1814, after a voyage of 156 days, the ship was quarantined on the northern shore of the harbour and the many remaining sick treated in tents erected as a temporary hospital the beginning of the North Head Quarantine Station. Only 2 of the female passengers on the Broxonbury died in transit. The stories of the female convicts from the Broxbornebury are many and varied and well recorded in many sources especially by Portia Robinson in The Women of Botany Bay, Sydney 1877 and Elizabeth Hook in Journey to a New Life: The Story of the ships Emu in 1812 and Broxbornebury in 1814, Including Crew, Female Convicts and Free Passengers on Board. Minto 2000 Ann and Ruth continued to have eventful lives in NSW, however Ann, age 81, was burnt to death when her dress caught fire while she dozed in front of daughter Elizabeth's fire. |
Source References: |
52. Type: Australia Birth Marriage Death Index 1787 - 1985 Record |
- Reference = (Birth) |
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